On view from January 21 to March 7, 2026,
Chris McCaw: Reversals and Revolutions marks a compelling return to San Francisco, presenting a body of work that reconsiders photography at its most elemental. Known for his rigorous engagement with light, time, and materials, McCaw approaches the medium as both a scientific experiment and a poetic act. This exhibition brings together new and iconic works that reveal how photographic images can be formed through direct encounters with natural forces rather than digital intervention.
At the center of the exhibition is
Inverse, a recent series that extends McCaw’s long-standing investigation into analog processes. Using solarization and carefully controlled overexposure, he creates images in which negative and positive coexist within a single frame. Landscapes appear simultaneously revealed and obscured, their tonal reversals prompting viewers to question how vision operates and how meaning is assigned to familiar terrain. These works feel less like representations of place than meditations on perception itself, where the mechanics of seeing become inseparable from the subject being seen.
Complementing these photographs are McCaw’s celebrated
Sunburn works, for which the sun is not only depicted but actively participates in the making of the image. Through prolonged exposures, concentrated sunlight physically burns its mark onto light-sensitive paper, tracing arcs and circles that record the Earth’s rotation and the passage of time. Each piece is the result of careful preparation and surrender, balancing precision with the unpredictability of natural conditions. The resulting images possess a striking physical presence, bearing the scars of their own creation.
Taken together, the works in
Reversals and Revolutions challenge conventional ideas of photography as a tool of capture or reproduction. Instead, McCaw presents the medium as an evolving dialogue between artist, environment, and process. His photographs invite slow looking and reflection, reminding viewers that even in a technologically accelerated world, photography can remain a deeply material, time-bound, and exploratory art form.
Image:
Chris McCaw, Inverse #122 (Lakes Basin), 2025 6 Unique paper negatives, partial in-camera solarization © Chris McCaw